Mark T
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
So my test results came back and I can categorically say, I’m not MODY3 – which was, in honesty, the result I expected.
In the background reading I’ve been doing I’ve found described in a few places something called Early Onset Type 2 Diabetes. They characterise it as a form of Type 2 which is typically diagnosed between 25 and 40. MODY is usually characterised as being diagnosed under the age of 25.
(these are of course just typical ages because it seems you can get diagnosed with any form of diabetes at almost any age)
The difference for early onset is that its defined as when you inherit Type 2 susceptibility genes from both parents where as in the form of Type 2 that onsets after 40 is typically a single set of inherited genes. One of the papers goes on to say that often the apparently non-diabetic parent has an previously undetected form, possibly IGT or IFG, that is only detected after an OGTT and fasting tests.
Now my grandmother on my mothers side has got Type 2 – but she is 87 so you could suggest that it is expected. On the other hand, my wifes 92 year old grandfather is a picture of health – so maybe it does come down to susceptibility genes!
My question is, out of the Type 2’s on this board who were diagnosed younger – how many have both parents diabetic? or diabetes in the grandparents on both sides?
The inference here is that there are bad genes on my mothers side as well as the known diabetes in my fathers line. But it also suggest my father’s mother was carrying some diabetes genes as my father and his brother both got diabetes in their late 30’s.
<now if you got this far, you are doing well 🙂>
In the background reading I’ve been doing I’ve found described in a few places something called Early Onset Type 2 Diabetes. They characterise it as a form of Type 2 which is typically diagnosed between 25 and 40. MODY is usually characterised as being diagnosed under the age of 25.
(these are of course just typical ages because it seems you can get diagnosed with any form of diabetes at almost any age)
The difference for early onset is that its defined as when you inherit Type 2 susceptibility genes from both parents where as in the form of Type 2 that onsets after 40 is typically a single set of inherited genes. One of the papers goes on to say that often the apparently non-diabetic parent has an previously undetected form, possibly IGT or IFG, that is only detected after an OGTT and fasting tests.
Now my grandmother on my mothers side has got Type 2 – but she is 87 so you could suggest that it is expected. On the other hand, my wifes 92 year old grandfather is a picture of health – so maybe it does come down to susceptibility genes!
My question is, out of the Type 2’s on this board who were diagnosed younger – how many have both parents diabetic? or diabetes in the grandparents on both sides?
The inference here is that there are bad genes on my mothers side as well as the known diabetes in my fathers line. But it also suggest my father’s mother was carrying some diabetes genes as my father and his brother both got diabetes in their late 30’s.
<now if you got this far, you are doing well 🙂>